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benjaminriveraphotography: DEREK KLENA•
@derek_klena for @theatre.ly
Styled by @jakesokoloff
Photo Assistant @croftography
#photography #broadwayphotography #commercialphotography
#moulinrougebroadway #theatrley #derkeklena
#fashion #portraits #profoto #canon
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The road back to Broadway with Moulin Rouge part 2.
For all the photos and Benjis story visit https://www.playbill.com/article/a-look-at-one-actors-journey-back-to-moulin-rouge-from-rehearsal-to-reopening
#Fred odgaard#ricky rojas#Aaron tveit#sahr ngaujah#Sonya tayeh#danny burstein#jeigh madjus#Holly James#ericka hunter yang#Ericka hunter#tilly evans krueger#Kara menendez#Mia deweese#robyn hurder#kaitlin mesh#moulin rouge broadway
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READ B.O.O.K. New Queer Photography Focus on the Margins download ebook PDF EPUB
B.O.O.K. New Queer Photography: Focus on the Margins download ebook PDF EPUB
New Queer Photography: Focus on the Margins
[PDF] Download New Queer Photography: Focus on the Margins Ebook | READ ONLINE
Author : Benjamin Wolbergs Publisher : Gingko Press ISBN : 1584237562 Publication Date : 2020-11-17 Language : Pages : 304
To Download or Read this book, click link below:
http://read.ebookcollection.space/?book=1584237562
(ebook online)
Synopsis : B.O.O.K. New Queer Photography: Focus on the Margins download ebook PDF EPUB
'This book is all about fearless queer photography.' i-D / ViceArt, more than anything, opens up the possibility of approaching one's own sexuality beyond the limits imposed by taboos. Not only does it allow for a risk-free, playful exploration of gender and forbidden desires, but it is unique in capturing its contradictions.In recent years, a young and active queer photography scene has emerged, helped in large part by social media. Indulging their desire for self-presentation, affirmation, and reflection, many photographers portray male homosexuality in particular as a private idyll. At the same time, they shine a critical light on their own and society's approach to transsexuality and gender roles and expose the corrupting but also affirmative power of pornography.Films, series, and mainstream cultural appropriation suggest that society has largely embraced queer lifestyles. However, a number of documentary photographers provide evidence that being gay or lesbian can still lead to marginalization, isolation, stigmatization, and violence in certain countries and communities. Their works also take the regime of sexuality itself into account and show that many bans on same-sex contact have colonial origins.This carefully researched and richly designed book introduces 52 contemporary photographers, including those of well-established notoriety as well as plenty of unknown and less well-known talent.Texts by:Ben Miller, Edna Bonhomme, Alexander Chee, Gert Jonkers, Shiv Kotecha and Huw Lemmey.Photographs by:Mohamad Abdouni, Michael Bailey-Gates, Damien Blotti�re, Gianfranco Brice�o, Francesco Cascavilla, Lia Clay Miller, Maika Elan, Kostis Fokas, Benjamin Fredrickson, Milan Gies, Goodyn Green, Julia Gunther, Alexandre Haefeli, Robin Hammond, Florian Hetz, Jonathan Icher, Claudia Kent, Jan Klos, Matt Lambert, Pepper Levain, Daniel Jack Lyons, Maria Clara Macr�, Mark McKnight, Rafael Medina, Melody Melamed, Manuel Moncayo, Hao Nguyen, Ralf Obergfell, Joseph, Wolfgang Ohlert, Brian Oldham, Laurence Philom�ne, Pauliana Valente Pimentel, Bettina Pittaluga, Laurence Rasti, Red Rubber Road, Spyros Rennt, Jordan Reznick, Lissa Rivera, Ashkan Sahihi, Bradley Secker, M. Sharkey, Shahria Sharmin, Christopher Sherman, Donal Talbot, Dustin Thierry, Birk Thomassen, Lasha Fox Tser tsvadze, Luis Venegas, Lukas Viar, Danielle Villasana, Gerardo Vizmanos and Soraya Zaman.
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Uncredited Photographer André Breton and Leon Trotsky, Mexico 1938
(I can’t tell, but that looks a bit like Frida Kahlo over Breton’s shoulder).
In 1938, a group made up mostly of leftist surrealist artists formed the International Federation of Independent Revolutionary Art (FIARI). FIARI released their organizing document, the Manifesto for an Independent Revolutionary Art, soon thereafter. Breton and Trotsky discussed FIARI when they met in Trotsky’s place of exile in Mexico in 1938. Trotsky actually wrote much of the Manifesto, although he did not attach his name to it. Some of the artists who joined FIARI included Breton, Diego Rivera, Benjamin Péret, Yves Tanguy, André Masson, Victor Serge, Marcel Martinet, Ignazio Silone, Herbert Read and George Orwell. As World War II was hovering just beyond the horizon, FIARI was virtually stillborn. Although it had organized branches in France, Mexico, the UK and the US, only the French section ever met and its publication, La Clé, put out only two issues.
“With all my heart I congratulate Diego Rivera and yourself [Breton] on the creation of the FIARI — a federation of truly revolutionary and truly independent artists...
...The duller and more ignorant the dictator, the more he feels called upon to prescribe the development of science, philosophy, and art. The sheep-like servility of the intelligentsia is, in turn a not unimportant sign of the rottenness of contemporary society...
The struggle for revolutionary ideas in art must begin once again with the struggle for artistic truth, not in terms of any single school, but in terms of the immutable faith of the artist in his own inner self. WITHOUT THIS, THERE IS NO ART. ‘YOU SHALL NOT LIE! THAT IS THE FORMULA OF ALL SALVATION...’
...Properly understood, the FIARI is not an aesthetic or political school and cannot become one. But FIARI can oxidise the atmosphere in which artists breathe and create...
...In our epoch of convulsive reaction, of cultural decline and return to savagery, truly independent creation cannot but be revolutionary by its very nature, for it cannot but seek an outlet from intolerable social suffocation. But art as a whole, and each artist in particular, seeks this outlet in ways proper to himself — not relying upon orders from outside, but rejecting such orders and heaping scorn upon all who submit to them. To encourage such attitudes among the best circles of artists — this is the task of the FIARI, I firmly believe that its name will enter history...”
--Leon Trotsky, Letter of Greeting to FIARI, 1938, published in Partisan Review, Vol. 6, No.2, Winter 1939.
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Life lost in the club Pulse
Today and every day we remember 49 innocent victims lost 3 years ago in Orlando, June 12, 2016. part 2
Christopher Andrew Leinonen, 32
Christopher attended Pulse on Saturday with his boyfriend, Juan Guerrero, who also died in the shooting. “Drew was the best person I’ve ever met. He was a film buff, enjoyed meeting new people, and always put others before himself,” said Leinonen’s friend Joshua. “His boyfriend Juan made him so happy, and they deserved to enjoy that happiness instead of having it taken away from them in a senseless act of violence. Love never goes away and so we will never forget them or how much better they made our lives.”
Rodolfo Ayala-Ayala, 33
Ayala was a Biologics Assistant at OneBlood, a local blood bank. He lived in Kissimmee, Florida. “He liked to joke with his staff and play pranks. Just an overall wonderful person.” "He had a unique style. He could rock a bow tie. He was famous for the bow tie. He wore very vibrant colors. Suspenders. A full hawk one day and the following day blond hair.” “He had an infectious smile. If u were having a bad day he would come in the room with his smile and he would brighten up the whole room. He was just a warm-hearted person. He had so much charisma.”
Luis Daniel Conde, 39
Conde was with his husband and partner of 13 years, Juan P. Rivera, celebrating a friend’s birthday at Pulse. “Juan and Luis were the kind of guys that made you feel welcomed without knowing you, Juan and Luis were always happy. I can’t recall seeing them upset or in an angry state.”
Leroy Valentin Fernandez, 25
Fernandez loved performing, on stage or off. Fernandez went by the name Leroy Valentin at work, and the name Indara onstage.
Jason Benjamin Josaphat, 19
Originally from Haiti, Josaphat was an aspiring photographer who was hedging his bets by studying nursing at Valencia Community College in Orlando, his father, Jackson, tells.
Frank Hernandez, 27
Hernandez worked at a Calvin Klein store in Orlando and had lived in the city for three years.
Akyra Murray, 18
Murray, an honors student, had recently graduated third in her class from the school. She scored 1,000 points for West Catholic Prep’s basketball team and had signed a letter of intent to play at Mercyhurst College.
Mercedez Marisol Flores, 26
Flores and fellow victim Amanda Alvear were best friends, Alvear’s cousin, Lizbeth, tells. “Mercedez and Amanda were the same. They had the same character. They basically were Bonnie and Clyde.” The pair had a 12-year friendship, and had traveled together to places like New York and Puerto Rico.тьShe studied literature at Valencia College, and was an avid music fan, the Sentinel reported. “She really did live her life the way she wanted to,” Flores’ niece Jennifer told the paper.
Gilberto Ramon Silva Menendez, 25
Menendez had an associates degree as a pulmonary tech and then went to cosmetology school. He wanted to become a nurse and was going back to school in September.He was born in Manati, Puerto Rico, and moved to Orlando, where he lived with his mother and grandmother.
Simon Adrian Carrillo Fernandez, 31
The store manager at a local McDonald’s, Fernandez, “loved listening to music, eating, watching cars and he loved buying watches.”
Oscar A. Aracena-Montero, 26
Oscar was a very sweet guy. Very sweet to everybody,” Acarena-Montero’s cousin Yamilka Pimentel told the Sentinel. “Every time he met somebody they would like him a lot. He was the type of guy who goes along with anybody.” Pimentel said that Acarena-Montero had been on vacation just one day before the attacks, returning from New York on Saturday.
Enrique L. Rios, Jr., 25
Rios was in Orlando for a friend’s birthday party and had planned to return to New York City in time for Sunday’s Puerto Rican Day Parade. He wanted “to kick back and have a good time,” Oliveras says. “This was supposed to be his vacation. I wish he never went.”
Miguel Angel Honorato, 30
Honorato was a married father of three boys, aged 15, 2, and 1. The manager of his family’s restaurant, Tortilleria #2, Honorato was a hard worker and a dog lover who enjoyed spending time with his extended family and friends. A Mexico native, Honorato loved traveling, and had been in the United States as a teenager.
Juan P. Rivera Velazquez, 37
Rivera, another Puerto Rico native, was the owner of Alta Peluqueria D’magazine hair salon in Kissimmee.
Juan Chevez-Martinez, 25
A native of Hidalgo, Mexico, Chavez-Martinez came to the Orlando area to visit with family members and “to have fun,” his cousin Margarita Perez tells. He had been in Florida for roughly a year when he was killed.
Tevin Eugene Crosby, 25
Crosby was voted West Iredell High’s “unsung hero” when he graduated from the North Carolina school in 2010, reported the Charlotte Observer. The designation meant that while Crosby wasn’t “the strongest academically,” he showed “integrity and determination,” his former English teacher Jacqueline Scott said. “I remember his smile, his love of life. … I want people to know the laughter and the joy he spread,” she said, noting that he was “doing well for himself.” Living in Michigan, Crosby was a business owner was only visiting Orlando on Sunday.
Jonathan Antonio Camuy Vega, 24
Tampa’s Gaither High School who worked at JP Morgan Chase, Fox 13 News reported.
Paul Terrell Henry, 41
Jaymie Glaspie, who said he was Henry’s best friend, tells, “He was an outgoing and fun-loving guy. He was very nurturing, very caring.” Glaspie says Henry had a son. “He was a really great dad. It’s so sad,” he tells.
Joel Rayon Paniagua, 32
Paniagua’s cousin Jose tells that the last he heard from the 32-year-old was that he was texting with a friend. “At a certain point, he stopped responding,” Luis says. Paniagua didn’t go to the club very much but liked Pulse because it was so inclusive: “There were men and women there. Anybody could go.”
Jean C. Nieves Rodriguez, 27
Rodriguez, was remembered by family and friends as a kind man and a hard worker. Nieves Rodriguez, originally from Puerto Rico, had worked as manager of a McDonald's and a check-cashing store and bought his first house a month and a half ago, the Orlando Sentinel reported.
Yilmary Rodriguez Solivan, 24
Solivan was a married mother of two sons. “She was the most loving and caring person you could ever meet, her smile lit up the room and her laughter brought a smile to your heart!” wrote her sister Natalia Canlan.
Angel L. Candelario-Padro, 28
Originally from Puerto Rico, Candelario-Padro moved to the Chicago to attend optometry school. He was about to join the Florida Retina Institute in Lake Mary, Florida, as an ophthalmic technician on June 20, according to Martinez. As a side gig, Candelario-Padro worked as a Zumba teacher. “He could dance up a storm,” his friend adds.
Antonio Davon Brown, 29
Brown, a native of Cocoa Beach, Florida, was a 2008 graduate from the Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University where he majored in criminal justice and was part of the ROTC program. He was a very positive person with a very good sense of humor.
Geraldo A. Ortiz-Jimenez, 25
Ortiz-Jimemez was in school for acting. A resident of Carolina in Puerto Rico, he was Dominican by birth.
Alejandro Barrios Martinez, 21
Martinez relocated to Florida just one year ago from Cuba, a friend of the 21-year-old told the the Sentinel. Always with a smile on his face, Martinez was “the type of person who would see you in a parking lot and he’d have a whole conversation with you.”
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JFK conspiracy theory is debunked in Mexico 57 years after Kennedy assassination
This man visited the Soviet embassy in Mexico Metropolis whereas Lee Harvey Oswald was in Mexico in 1963. U.S. officers suppose it might be Oswald. Corbis through Getty Photographs
Most conspiracy theories surrounding President John F. Kennedy’s assassination have been disproven. Kennedy was not killed by a gas-powered system triggered by aliens or by actor Woody Harrelson’s dad.
However hypothesis about Kennedy’s Nov. 22, 1963 homicide in Dallas continues, fueled by unreleased categorized paperwork, weird ballistics and the declare of murderer Lee Harvey Oswald – who was later killed on stay TV whereas in police custody – that he was “only a patsy.”
A number of JFK assassination consultants, like the previous New York Occasions investigative reporter Phillip Shenon, see Mexico as the most effective place to search out solutions concerning a potential conspiracy and who was behind it.
Oswald’s Mexico visa from 1963, with entry and exit stamps. Mexican Secretary of the Inside
Simply over a month earlier than Kennedy’s killing, Oswald took a bus from Texas to Mexico Metropolis. He arrived Friday morning, Sept. 27, 1963 and left very early on Wednesday, Oct. 2, in accordance with American and Mexican intelligence.
Was Oswald a type of rogue James Bond who went south of the border to consort with communists, Cuban revolutionaries and spies – or only a deranged killer?
I dug into that query whereas researching my guide on conspiracy narratives in Mexico, and I feel I discovered one thing everyone else missed: a gap within the story of the very man who began a tenacious conspiracy concept about Oswald’s Mexico journey.
Communist Mexico Metropolis
Mexico was a Chilly Struggle sizzling spot within the mid-20th century, a haven for Soviet exiles, American leftists fleeing the anti-communist persecution of McCarthyism and sympathizers with Cuba’s Castro regime. Each communist and democratic nation had an embassy in Mexico Metropolis – the one place within the Western Hemisphere the place these enemies coexisted roughly overtly.
Russian exile Leon Trotsky and his spouse, Natalia Sedova, meet artist and communist Diego Rivera in Mexico Metropolis, 1937. Enrique Diaz/Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Photographs
In accordance with witnesses from the Cuban and Soviet diplomatic missions, Oswald visited their embassies repeatedly on Friday and Saturday. He was desperately looking for visas to these international locations, which People had been then prohibited from visiting.
Informed such paperwork would take months to course of, Oswald acquired in a heated argument with the Cuban consul, Emilio Azcué. Oswald additionally compelled a KGB volleyball match on Saturday morning to be canceled when he brandished a weapon on the Soviet consulate, earlier than bursting into tears and leaving.
These occasions are nicely documented by the CIA, which within the 1960s had ramped up its Mexico operations to watch communist exercise, even hiring 200 Mexican brokers to assist. The Mexican Secret Service, whose 1960s-era recordsdata Mexico has just lately begun to declassify, additionally tracked Oswald on Sept. 27 and Sept. 28, 1963.
Oswald’s whereabouts for the subsequent three-and-a-half days, nonetheless, stay unknown.
A Mexican intelligence report on Lee Harvey Oswald, declassified in 2019. Pedro Pardo/AFP through Getty Photographs
A conspiracy concept is born
A principal conspiracy about Oswald’s undocumented time in Mexico Metropolis places him involved with harmful Mexicans on the left aspect of the Chilly Struggle.
This story originated in March 1967, when the American consul within the Mexican coastal metropolis of Tampico, Benjamin Ruyle, was shopping for drinks for native journalists.
One in all them – Óscar Contreras Lartigue, a 28-year-old reporter for El Sol de Tampico – instructed Ruyle he’d met Oswald in 1963 when he was a legislation scholar at Mexico’s Nationwide Autonomous College.
Contreras stated he’d been in a pro-Castro campus group and that Oswald had begged this group for assist getting a Cuban visa. In accordance with Contreras, Oswald spent two days with these Nationwide Autonomous College college students, then met up with them once more just a few days later on the Cuban Embassy.
Evidently afraid for his life, Contreras wouldn’t inform Ruyle rather more. He stated he himself had traveled to Cuba, knew individuals within the Castro regime and had blown up the statue of a former Mexican president on campus in Mexico Metropolis. Contreras feared persecution for his political actions.
Contreras did say this wasn’t the primary time he was sharing his story, although. After JFK was shot, Contreras instructed Ruyle, he’d commented to his editor that he’d just lately met Oswald.
The Contreras query
Contreras’ account hinted at suspicious, beforehand unknown connections between Oswald and communist Cuba made shortly earlier than JFK’s assassination.
His story was, in accordance with a memo later despatched from CIA headquarters, “the primary stable investigative lead now we have on Oswald’s actions in Mexico.” U.S. authorities officers wanted to search out out if Contreras was a reliable supply.
Oswald’s mug shot. CORBIS/Corbis through Getty Photographs
Three months after Ruyle’s completely satisfied hour, a CIA official from Mexico Metropolis went to Tampico to query Contreras. Through the six-hour interrogation, Contreras nonetheless refused to enter particulars, however he did say Oswald by no means talked about assassination – solely that he stated repeatedly he “needed to get to Cuba.”
In 1978, a researcher from the U.S. Home Choose Fee on Assassinations named Dan Hardway went to Mexico to research the JFK assassination. He was unable to interview Contreras regardless of a number of makes an attempt, however in an influential report warned his account shouldn’t be dismissed.
The New York Occasions reporter Shenon, who interviewed Oscar Contreras for a 2013 guide on the JFK assassination, additionally discovered Contreras credible. Shenon wrote that Contreras – whom he calls a “distinguished journalist” – “went a lot additional” of their interview than he had with the CIA, alleging “much more in depth contacts between Oswald and Cuban brokers in Mexico.”
Dan Hardway, who’s now a lawyer in West Virginia, nonetheless believes Contreras. After studying Shenon’s guide, he reiterated in 2015 that Lee Harvey Oswald may need been a part of a wider Cuban intelligence internet.
Gap within the internet
Óscar Contreras died in 2016, so I couldn’t interview him myself.
However in my investigation, a minute element of his biography grabbed my consideration – an apparently neglected contradiction that would undermine his complete story.
A 1963 ‘Sol de Tampico’ column by Contreras.
In Contreras’ telling, he fled the Nationwide Autonomous College campus and moved to Tampico round 1964. But Contreras additionally allegedly instructed his “editor” about his encounter with Oswald after the 1963 Kennedy assassination.
Faculty newspapers aren’t frequent in Mexico, and Contreras was a legislation scholar. So how may he have had an editor in 1963?
I assumed his hometown paper, El Sol de Tampico, may maintain the reply. Digging via its archives, I discovered that the newspaper ran a Sunday gossip column within the early 1960s referred to as “Crisol,” or “melting pot.”
Óscar Contreras grew to become the reporter for “Crisol” on June 6, 1963, and continued writing the gossip column in September and October that 12 months.
Whereas Lee Harvey Oswald was in Mexico Metropolis, Contreras was 300 miles away in Tampico. In flamboyant prose, pale again problems with the native paper present, he chronicled the splendid marriage ceremony receptions, quinceañeras and yacht excursions of Tampico’s excessive society.
Three darkish days
I imagine the Sol de Tampico archives discredit Contereras’ account.
Contreras wrote for Sol de Tampico on Oct. 6, 1963. Sol de Tampico
A political correspondent might stay removed from the place his newspaper is revealed. However for a gossip columnist, that will be dereliction of obligation.
This revelation plunges Oswald’s fall 1963 journey to Mexico again into the darkish.
There are different conspiracy theories, together with that Oswald had a Mexican mistress who took him to a celebration of communists and spies.
But it surely’s extra probably Mexico holds no hidden clues to JFK’s assassination.
Conspiracy theories provide assurances of depth and closure, a promise that the largest enigma of the 20th century is solvable. However from what we learn about what Oswald did and didn’t do in Mexico Metropolis, he was a unstable, disorganized loner who couldn’t even deal with journey logistics.
JFK’s assassination is a chilly case. And in Mexico, solely exhausted leads stay.
Gonzalo Soltero obtained funding from a Newton Superior Fellowship by the British Academy.
from Growth News https://growthnews.in/jfk-conspiracy-theory-is-debunked-in-mexico-57-years-after-kennedy-assassination/ via https://growthnews.in
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The funny photos of Benjamín Vicuña with his children in the recordings of ATAV: "My three B in … – Ciudad Magazine
Like any boy or girl, the children who Benjamín Vicuña have with Pampita –Baptist (eleven), Beltran (7) and Benicio (4) – they love to visit their dad at his particular job Excited, the children were part of the behind-the-scenes recordings of their new series in Chile, and enjoyed seeing their father acting. This is Inés del alma mía, inspired by Isabel Allende's novel. In addition to recording in Spain, he also has scenes in Chile and Peru with a cast that he heads Elena Rivera Y Eduardo Noriega.
In the middle of the recordings, Benjamin was photographed with the children: characterized, with a full smile and super buddy among his boys. "My three Bs on the set," Benjamin said next to the photos. "My best director," he added in which he shows Bauti, super concentrated, watching the scene.
China Suarez, with whom the artist has Magnolia, reacted with tenderness to the postcards of Benja with the babies and dedicated to the four several emojis of red hearts.
With him everywhere!
Let's block ads! (Why?)
Bài viết The funny photos of Benjamín Vicuña with his children in the recordings of ATAV: "My three B in … – Ciudad Magazine đã xuất hiện đầu tiên vào ngày Funface.
from Funface https://funface.net/funny-pics/the-funny-photos-of-benjamin-vicuna-with-his-children-in-the-recordings-of-atav-my-three-b-in-ciudad-magazine/
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Filthy Rich Season 1 Releasing at September 21, 2020 on FOX and September 22 on Hulu
Drama | TV Series (2020– )
FILTHY RICH is a southern Gothic family drama in which wealth, power and religion collide – with outrageously soapy results.
When the patriarch of a mega-rich Southern family, famed for creating a wildly successful Christian television network, dies in a plane crash, his wife and family are stunned to learn that he fathered three illegitimate children, all of whom are written into his will, threatening their family name and fortune.
Creator: Tate Taylor
Directors: Tate Taylor, Christina Voros
Writers: Rhett Rossi, Tate Taylor, Sheri Holman, Gerald Cuesta, Bryan Goluboff, Nina Stiefel, C.A. Johnson, Abe Sylvia
Stars: Kim Cattrall, Benjamin Levy Aguilar, Corey Cott, Aubrey Dollar, Steve Harris, Melia Kreiling, Olivia Macklin
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►Cast
Kim Cattrall… Margaret Monreaux 10 episodes, 2020Benjamin Levy Aguilar… Antonio Rivera 10 episodes, 2020Corey Cott… Eric Monreaux 10 episodes, 2020Aubrey Dollar… Rose Monreaux 10 episodes, 2020Steve Harris… Franklin Lee 10 episodes, 2020Melia Kreiling… Ginger Sweet 10 episodes, 2020Olivia Macklin… Becky Monreaux 10 episodes, 2020Gerald McRaney… Eugene Monreaux 10 episodes, 2020Mark L. Young… Jason Conley 10 episodes, 2020Aqueela Zoll… Rachel 10 episodes, 2020Cranston Johnson… Luke Taylor 8 episodes, 2020Kenny Alfonso… Don Bouchard 6 episodes, 2020Gia Carides… Veronica 6 episodes, 2020Aaron Lazar… Reverend Paul Luke Thomas / … 5 episodes, 2020Deneen Tyler… Norah Ellington 5 episodes, 2020Ronald Joe Vasquez… Audience / … 5 episodes, 2020Gabriel Yarborough… Young Franklin 5 episodes, 2020Lo Graham… Young Margaret 4 episodes, 2020Carl Palmer… Townes Dockerty 4 episodes, 2020Jeff Pearson… Young Eugene Monreaux 4 episodes, 2020Jared Bankens… Augie 3 episodes, 2020Tina Lifford… Monique 3 episodes, 2020Sheridan Philipp… Jester / … 3 episodes, 2020Mikaela Kimani Armstrong… Caroline 2 episodes, 2020Mason Beauchamp… TK 2 episodes, 2020Kenneth Kynt Bryan… Stagehand 2 episodes, 2020Dominique DuVernay… Saint Wagon Girl #1 2 episodes, 2020Annie Golden… Ellie 2 episodes, 2020Scott Green… Elite Fighting Match Patron / … 2 episodes, 2020Timothy Hinrichs… Audience / … 2 episodes, 2020Travis Howard… Brother Corley 2 episodes, 2020Gretchen Koerner… Pat Conley 2 episodes, 2020Toney Chapman Steele… Church goer / … 2 episodes, 2020Rachel York… Tina Sweet 2 episodes, 2020Yosef Podolski… Ishtar ‘Chechen Bear’ Deela 1 episode, 2020Jenanne Alexander… Audience Member / … 1 episode, 2020Charles Barber… Limo Driver 1 episode, 2020Aleksei Isay Barrera… Security Guard 1 episode, 2020Patti Brindley… Zydeco Dancer 1 episode, 2020Tracy Brotherton… Monreaux Employee 1 episode, 2020Judy McGee Burley… Country Club Lady 1 episode, 2020Michael Cannon… Photographer 1 episode, 2020Hick Cheramie… Press Photographer 1 episode, 2020Rebecca Chulew… Press 1 episode, 2020Michelle L. Clarke… Country Club Lady 1 episode, 2020Mark Druhet… Marcus 1 episode, 2020Juan Gaspard… Church member 1 episode, 2020Jim Gleason… Bob Witherspoon 1 episode, 2020Whitney Goin… Barbara Bouchard 1 episode, 2020Lucy Golden… Country Club Lady 1 episode, 2020Lara Grice… Helen Sterling 1 episode, 2020Michael ‘Mick’ Harrity… John Conley 1 episode, 2020Louis Hill Jr.… Fight Bell Ringer / … 1 episode, 2020Brooke Hurring… Attractive Woman #2 1 episode, 2020Lyn Jagger… Church member 1 episode, 2020Aaron Mitchell… Talk show audience server 1 episode, 2020Edward Parker… Garden party guest 1 episode, 2020Freddie Poole… MMA Referee 1 episode, 2020Peter Porte… Trey Atkins 1 episode, 2020Reva Richardson… Paramedic 1 episode, 2020Mary Alice Risener… Attractive Woman #1 1 episode, 2020Shawn Sanz1 episode, 2020Alfred Smith III… Actor 1 episode, 2020Lindsey G. Smith… Co-Star 1 episode, 2020Sue-Lynn… Saint Wagon Lady 1 episode, 2020Caleb J. Thaggard… Nut Job 1 1 episode, 2020Kasia Trepagnier… Audience Member 1 episode, 2020Lawrence Turner… Casper 1 episode, 2020Kanesha Washington… Alexis 1 episode, 2020Tadasay Young… Detective 1 episode, 2020Gordon Dexheimer… Newspaper Reporter 1 episode, 2020Palo Jimenez… Church Member Extra 1 episode, 2020Gina Montana… TV Executive 1 episode, 2020Candace Reuter… Debutante 1 episode, 2020Julie Anne Savage… Tv Show Audience Member 1 episode, 2020
The post Filthy Rich Season 1 Releasing at September 21, 2020 on FOX and September 22 on Hulu first appeared on TellUsEpisode.net.
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benjaminriveraphotography: •DEREK KLENA•
@derek_klena for @theatre.ly
Styled by @jakesokoloff
Photo Assistant @croftography
#photography #broadwayphotography #commercialphotography
#moulinrougebroadway #theatrley #derkeklena
#fashion #portraits #profoto #canon
#broadwayphotographer #nycphotography
#photographersofnyc #newyorkcity
#BenjaminRiveraPhotography #broadwaysinger
#broadway #derekklena
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DM or email me for rates and scheduling!
#derek klena#broadway#photoshoot: benjamin rivera#photographer: benjamin rivera#social media#photos#instagram
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Moulin Rouge set
“Moulin Rouge” was thrilling from the moment I entered the theater… until about ten minutes after it began. That’s because the brightest star in this stage adaptation of Baz Luhrmann’s 2001 movie musical is designer Derek McLane’s set. Before we even take our seats, it envelopes us in love, or at least in lots of red – a huge red neon “Moulin Rouge” sign above red lights in the shape of a half a dozen hearts nestled lovingly within each other, a full-sized, red windmill full of lights perched on the box seats above us to our left, a life-sized elephant (which, for variety, is purple) in the box seats to our right…
Please don’t misunderstand. There are other things to like besides the design in “Moulin Rouge,” but just nothing else that’s quite as thrilling. This is a jukebox musical for the age of Spotify. It crams in some 75 cheekily anachronistic pop songs into what feels like perfunctory melodrama about a love triangle taking place in the famed Parisian nightclub Moulin Rouge in 1899.
The playlist is certainly fun, familiar and hummable; the songs from the movie (from Broadway standards like “The Sound of Music” and “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” to David Bowie’s “Nature Boy,” and Elton John’s “Your Song”) are supplemented with hits by singers who have become stars in the 17 years since the movie was made: Lady Gaga, Florence and the Machine, Sia, Beyoncé, Adele, Katy Perry. The cast features some of the most talented and appealing actors that Broadway has to offer. The always reliable Danny Burstein is impresario Harold Zidler, good-hearted if a little sleazy, who is trying to keep the club from shutting down. Aaron Tveit is Christian, an innocent composer from Ohio, who moves to the Parisian artistic district of Montmartre in pursuit of the bohemian ideals of truth, beauty, freedom and love. He gets enlisted to write a musical for Moulin Rouge that will help save it…and meets Satine. Karen Olivio is Satine, who becomes Christian’s object of desire, a performer at the Moulin Rouge and the star of the show within the show. Tam Mutu as the villainous Duke of Monroth, the show’s producer, who gets in the way of the love between Christian and Satine by demanding Satine for himself.
Each of these performers gets at least one number that shows them at their powerhouse best, as do Robyn Hurder and Ricky Rojas in a vigorous dance number to Lady Gaga’s “Bad Romance.” Even when the performers are delivering the many throwaway medleys, they do so playfully enough as to make us feel let in on the fun.
Yet, little of “Moulin Rouge” is done better than the movie, which is half an hour shorter and twice as sweet. There isn’t the same chemistry between Olivo and Tveit as between Nicole Kidman and Ewan Macgregor. The comic scenes – such as when Satine thinks that Christian is the Duke – aren’t as funny, and the dramatic scenes are at best impressive rather than moving.
Nobody would accuse the movie “Moulin Rouge” of being subtle, yet the stage musical feels much more often like a sensory assault – and not just because of the standard confetti cannons. The movie begins with John Leguizamo as Toulouse-Lautrec singing the haunting Nature Boy (“There was a boy A very strange enchanted boy”) while the camerazooms from the stage through the streets and steeples of Montmartre to focus on Ewan McGregor crying at his typewriter, while he begins typing the story, telling it in voiceover. The stage musical begins with a quartet of scantily clad buxom beauties at the lip of the stage vamping “Voulez-vous coucher avec moi (ce soir)?”– Lady Marmalade, made a hit in 1974 by the girl group Labelle and covered constantly since then. Both songs are in both movie and musical, but the movie is more adept at hooking us into the narrative than John Logan’s book for the musical.
Even if I’d never seen the movie, though, I would surely be disappointed by the stage version. No, it doesn’t mark the end of civilization as we know it, or even the end of the Broadway musical. But it does feel like a throwback to an era when musicals meant little more than the efficient and intellectually-deficient delivery of a collection of melodies.
Given these disappointments, Derek McLane’s set is arguably to “Moulin Rouge” what the 20 foot puppet is to “King Kong” – the one undiluted delight, and the main reason to make the trip to the theater, rather than stay home with memories of the superior, iconic movie version. (It may not be just a coincidence that producer Carmen Pavlovic, the head of Global Creatures, is the lead producer of both “Moulin Rouge” and “King Kong,” her first two forays onto Broadway.) The atmosphere the set creates is most inviting when you first enter the Al Hirschfeld Theater, but the pleasures introduced periodically throughout the show by the design team – not just the set but Catherine Zuber’s costumes and Justin Townsend’s lighting — kept my attention even when I started reacting to the next batch of pop songs with “Yeah, ok, I get it.”
Click on any photograph by Matthew Murphy below to see it enlarged.
Karen Olivo as Satine and Aaron Tveit as Christian
Karen Olivo as Satine and Tam Mutu as The Duke of Monroth
Jacqueline B. Arnold as La Chocolat, Robyn Hurder as Nini, Holly James as Arabia and Jeigh Madjus as Baby Doll
Danny Burstein as the impresario Harold Zidler
Tam Mutu as The Duke of Monroth
Sahr Ngaujah as Toulouse-Lautrec, new friend of Aaron Tveit as composer Christian who also befriends Ricky Rojas as Santiago
Ricky Rojas as Santiago and Robyn Hurder as Nini
Aaron Tveit as Christian and Karen Olivo as Satine
Moulin Rouge set
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Moulin Rouge Al Hirschfeld Theater Book by John Logan; Music supervision, orchestrations, and arrangements by Justin Levine; Choreography by Sonya Tayeh; Directed by Alex Timbers Set design by Derek McLane, costume design by Catherine Zuber, lighting by Justin Townsend, sound by Peter Hylenski, wig and hair design by David Brian Brown , makeup by Sarah Cimino Cast: Karen Olivo, Aaron Tveit, Danny Burstein, Sahr Ngaujah, Tam Mutu, Ricky Rojas, Robyn Hurder, Jacqueline B. Arnold, Holly James, Jeigh Madjus, Olutayo Bosede, Kyle Brown, Sam J. Cahn, Max Clayton, Paloma Garcia-Lee, Bahiyah Hibah, Ericka Hunter, Morgan Marcell, Brandt Martinez, Jodi McFadden, Reed Luplau, Kevyn Morrow, Fred Odgaard, Dylan Paul, Khori Michelle Petinaud and Benjamin Rivera Running time: Two hours and 40 minutes, including one intermission. Tickets: $99 to $399
Moulin Rouge Review: A jukebox musical for the age of Spotify “Moulin Rouge” was thrilling from the moment I entered the theater… until about ten minutes after it began.
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Football family reunion in Charlotte
The phrase “football is family” is used often in the NFL. It may seem overused, but it is truly a way of life in this league. During pre-game warmups, players will gravitate toward each other on the field, share a hug, catch up, ask about family, hug again and go about their routine. The same goes for post-game socializing, which inevitably leads to jersey swaps with sentimental messages scribbled across the numbers. Post-game poses with friends from the opposite sideline is my most common photo request.
I was prepared to document quite a few reunions with the Bills coming to Bank of America Stadium. It started just as I would have thought, with running back Fozzy Whittaker walking over during warmups and leaping into former Panthers fullback Mike Tolbert’s arms.
Fozzy commented on Mike’s custom cleats, saying they had “sauce”. Tolbert replied, “Man, you get me. I told my guy that I needed to come in here dripping sauce.”
Wide receiver Kelvin Benjamin yelled “Tolb!” across the field trying to get Tolbert’s attention, defensive end Charles Johnson joked around with him, and defensive line coach Eric Washington warmly embraced him. Needless to say, everyone was happy to see Mike Tolbert.
Luckily I turned around just in time to catch former Panthers quarterback Joe Webb and wide receiver Damiere Byrd excitedly greeting each other at midfield. I missed the exchange of their special handshake, but you can still see how incredibly happy they were to see each other.
Matt Worswick, former football operations assistant (current assistant to the head coach in Buffalo), was always one of the hardest working guys behind the scenes for football operations and one of the nicest people you will ever meet. Very rarely do I see head coach Ron Rivera on the field during warmups, but he was out early Sunday, and one of his first interactions was with Matt. Head athletic trainer Ryan Vermillion also found Matt on the sidelines before the game, as did several players.
Two important interactions I was anticipating were between Coach Rivera and Bills general manager Brandon Beane and head coach Sean McDermott. After the coaches hugged, the Bills’ team photographer, Craig Melvin (who was photographing the interaction from the other side) said, “That’s’ the money shot.”
Before the game, in the small window of time before kickoff, in the small area of space at midfield between the two teams, I saw the main interaction I was waiting for: a giant bear hug between Stew and Tolbert.
During this time, mini-reunions were happening every time I turned around. The bonds between teammates are quick to form and almost impossible to break. It is evident in the instant rapport, the body language, the sentimental taps to the head, and despite the three hours of battle on the field, they go right back to being friends after the final seconds tick away.
Sunday’s game did not yield any touchdowns for either team, so there were no classic celebration shots, or “jube” (short for jubilation). But if you look at the faces of these players as they see members of their football family again, even if for a brief time, it is some of the finest “jube” you will find.
The post Football family reunion in Charlotte appeared first on Daily Star Sports.
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Football family reunion in Charlotte
The phrase “football is family” is used often in the NFL. It may seem overused, but it is truly a way of life in this league. During pre-game warmups, players will gravitate toward each other on the field, share a hug, catch up, ask about family, hug again and go about their routine. The same goes for post-game socializing, which inevitably leads to jersey swaps with sentimental messages scribbled across the numbers. Post-game poses with friends from the opposite sideline is my most common photo request.
I was prepared to document quite a few reunions with the Bills coming to Bank of America Stadium. It started just as I would have thought, with running back Fozzy Whittaker walking over during warmups and leaping into former Panthers fullback Mike Tolbert’s arms.
Fozzy commented on Mike’s custom cleats, saying they had “sauce”. Tolbert replied, “Man, you get me. I told my guy that I needed to come in here dripping sauce.”
Wide receiver Kelvin Benjamin yelled “Tolb!” across the field trying to get Tolbert’s attention, defensive end Charles Johnson joked around with him, and defensive line coach Eric Washington warmly embraced him. Needless to say, everyone was happy to see Mike Tolbert.
Luckily I turned around just in time to catch former Panthers quarterback Joe Webb and wide receiver Damiere Byrd excitedly greeting each other at midfield. I missed the exchange of their special handshake, but you can still see how incredibly happy they were to see each other.
Matt Worswick, former football operations assistant (current assistant to the head coach in Buffalo), was always one of the hardest working guys behind the scenes for football operations and one of the nicest people you will ever meet. Very rarely do I see head coach Ron Rivera on the field during warmups, but he was out early Sunday, and one of his first interactions was with Matt. Head athletic trainer Ryan Vermillion also found Matt on the sidelines before the game, as did several players.
Two important interactions I was anticipating were between Coach Rivera and Bills general manager Brandon Beane and head coach Sean McDermott. After the coaches hugged, the Bills’ team photographer, Craig Melvin (who was photographing the interaction from the other side) said, “That’s’ the money shot.”
Before the game, in the small window of time before kickoff, in the small area of space at midfield between the two teams, I saw the main interaction I was waiting for: a giant bear hug between Stew and Tolbert.
During this time, mini-reunions were happening every time I turned around. The bonds between teammates are quick to form and almost impossible to break. It is evident in the instant rapport, the body language, the sentimental taps to the head, and despite the three hours of battle on the field, they go right back to being friends after the final seconds tick away.
Sunday’s game did not yield any touchdowns for either team, so there were no classic celebration shots, or “jube” (short for jubilation). But if you look at the faces of these players as they see members of their football family again, even if for a brief time, it is some of the finest “jube” you will find.
The post Football family reunion in Charlotte appeared first on Daily Star Sports.
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Fraction is very pleased to announce Fraction 98.
Nine years ago, Fraction launched with the simple idea of showing the best work in emerging, contemporary photography. Ninety-eight issues later, we push on with just that; the best work.
It is truly important to thank those who make Fraction possible every month and I would also like to send our sincerest thanks to all of the photographers who have appeared in Fraction over they years: thank you for trusting in Fraction and letting us show your beautiful, thought provoking work.
For the 9th anniversary issue, we bring you 98 photographs from more than 1700 that were submitted. We hope you enjoy them.
David Bram Editor-in-Chief
The 98
Patricia Ackerman, Samin Ahmadzadeh, Ben Arnon, Anne-Laure Autin, Fatemeh Baigmoradi, Andrew Beckham, Dave Bennett, Giulia Berto, Michael Borowski, Kwasi Boyd-Bouldin, Johnny Brian, Barney Britton, Greg Brophy, Jessie Bruah, Pablo Charnas, Tony Chirinos, Troy Colby, Xavier Cortial, Cristina Cusani, Zsuzsa Darab, Jack Deese, Benjamin Dimmitt, Alex Djordjevic, Nina Weinberg Doran, Aaron Dougherty, Rebecca Drolen, Sean Du, France Dubois, Meghan Duda, Julia Dunham, Leah Dyjak, Yorgos Efthymiadis, Enrico Markus Essl, Sarah Fahlin, Barry Falk, Nicholas Fedak, Matthew Finley, Daniel George, Juan Giraldo, William Glaser, Conner Gordon, Kris Graves, Elizabeth Greenberg, Amanda Greene, Pepe Guinea, Tytia Habing, Liz Hickok, Jamie Ho, Kevin Hoth, Sarah Jamison, Jocelen Janon, Ellen Jantzen, Sandra Jetton, Ron Johnson, Kevin B Jones, Svetlana Jovanovic, Rachel Jump, Jason Koxvold, Ashley West Leonard, Kuba Los, Kon Markogiannis, Anne Arden McDonald, Dimitri Mellow, Nicholas Meyer, Diego Morena, Laura Noel, Samantha Obman, Suzanne Revy, Jeff Rhode, Tom Ridout, Ilisa Katz Rissman, Lissa Rivera, Fabio Miguel Roque, Denis Roussel, Shawn Rowe, Catie Colvin Sampson, Andi Schreiber, Jeanene Scott, Mankichi Shinshi, Nick Simko, John Steck Jr, Deb Stoner, Michael Sullivan, Jane Szabo, Jennifer Timmer Trail, Txomin Txueka, Preston Utley, Joesphe Vitone, Ira Wagner, Nichole Washington, Rebecca Webb, Sandra Chen Weinstein, Vincent Wern, Wendell White, Emily Wiethorn, Julia Wilson, Peter Ydeen, Hajime Yoshida
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[#MUSIC #FILM #ART] #FirstSaturday: Future Feminisms feat. Charlotte dos Santos, The Linda Grasso, Forward March NY, Buscabulla, Suha Araj, “Brown Girls” and Natasha Diggs Saturday, March 4 | 5-10pm Brooklyn Museum | 200 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn, NY Admission: FREE
MUSIC: CHARLOTTE DOS SANTOS | 5pm Vocalist and songwriter Charlotte Dos Santos starts the evening with music from her upcoming debut Cleo, sampling soul, jazz, and Afro-Latin through vintage drum machines.
BLUES LOUNGE BAR | 6–10pm Grab a drink and enjoy a full evening of blues music in anticipation of April’s Target First Saturday, which will celebrate our exhibition Infinite Blue.
FILM: THE TRANS LIST | 6pm In this documentary (Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, 2016, 57 min.), transgender Americans share their experiences in their own words. Sylvia Rivera Law Project facilitates a post-screening conversation in honor of Women’s History Month, with writer Kate Bornstein and DJ and philanthropist Lina Bradford, both subjects from Greenfield-Sanders’s portrait project. Film introduced by Greenfield-Sanders. 330 free tickets at the Admissions Desk at 5 pm.
HANDS-ON ART | 6–8pm Georgia O’Keeffe is well known both for her paintings of flowers and for crafting a distinct personal aesthetic through her dress and art. Take inspiration from her by creating wearable, handmade paper flowers. 330 free tickets at the Admissions Desk at 5 pm.
FORWARD MARCH NY: POSTCARD WRITE-IN | 6–8pm Join the dialogue about human and civil rights, then write postcards to your legislators. Hosted by Forward March NY (formerly the NYC Chapter of Women’s March on Washington).
SCHOLAR TALK: LINDA GRASSO | 6pm Linda Grasso previews her forthcoming book Equal Under the Sky: Georgia O’Keeffe and Twentieth-Century Feminism. Drawing from paintings, photographs, correspondence, press, fan mail, and archival documents, Grasso explores how O’Keeffe and feminism have been linked in popular culture and the public imagination. 25 free tickets at the Admissions Desk at 5 pm.
MUSIC: BUSCABULLA | 7:00 p.m. Experimental dream pop duo Buscabulla's mix of funk, soul, and electric pays homage to their Puerto Rican roots.
POP-UP GALLERY TALKS | 7:00–8:00 p.m. Teen Apprentices host ten-minute discussions about works of art in Marilyn Minter: Pretty/Dirty.
CURATOR TOUR: GEORGIA O'KEEFFE | 7:30 p.m. Guest curator Wanda Corn gives an inside look at Georgia O'Keeffe’s iconic approach to self-fashioning. Discounted tickets for Georgia O'Keeffe: Living Modern are available for $12 during Target First Saturdays (only available on-site).
FILM: THE CUP READER AND PIONEER HIGH | 7:30 p.m. Brooklyn-based filmmaker Suha Araj shares two short films about resilient Palestinian women. A fortune-teller named Warde translates as multiple generations rhapsodize about love in The Cup Reader (2013, 12 min.), and Pioneer High (2014, 10 min.) follows a student who starts a revolution by disobeying a dress code she doesn’t understand. 25 free tickets at the Admissions Desk at 6:30 pm.
SCREENING: BROWN GIRLS | 8:00 p.m. Catch the Brooklyn premiere of the anticipated new web series Brown Girls (Fatimah Asghar and Sam Bailey, 2016). The series follows two women from completely different backgrounds—Leila, a South Asian–American writer, and Patricia, a black American musician—and their powerful friendship. Followed by a talkback with the cast and crew moderated by multimedia artist Lindsay Catherine Harris, Astor Teen Programs Coordinator. 330 free tickets at the Admissions Desk at 7 pm.
MUSIC: NATASHA DIGGS WITH #SOULINTHEHORN | 8:15–10:00 p.m. Natasha Diggs is a force to be reckoned with on vinyl. Join us for an all-female-fronted edition of her popular #SoulInTheHorn party, a horn-infused, genre-bending evening of disco, Latin, Afrobeat, reggae, hip-hop, house, and rare grooves that pays tribute to women changemakers and trailblazers. Featuring Lakecia Benjamin on saxophone.
#music#art#Future Feminisms#brooklyn museum#Charlotte dos Santos#jazz#BLUES LOUNGE BAR#THE TRANS LIST#Forward March NY#human rights#civil rights#BUSCABULLA#Wanda Corn#Suha Araj#THE CUP READER AND PIONEER HIGH#BROWN GIRLS#Natasha Diggs#Soul in the Horn
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benjaminriveraphotography: •DEREK KLENA•
@derek_klena for @theatre.ly
Styled by @jakesokoloff
Photo Assistant @croftography
#photography #broadwayphotography #moulinrouge
#moulinrougebroadway #theatrley #derkeklena
#fashion #portraits #profoto #canon
#broadwayphotographer #nycphotography
#photographersofnyc #newyorkcity
#BenjaminRiveraPhotography #broadwaysinger
#broadway
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DM or email me for rates and scheduling!
#derek klena#broadway#photoshoot: benjamin rivera#photoshoot: theatrely#photographer: benjamin rivera#social media#photos#instagram
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benjaminriveraphotography: •DEREK KLENA•
@derek_klena for @theatre.ly
Styled by @jakesokoloff
Photo Assistant @croftography
#photography #broadwayphotography #moulinrouge
#moulinrougebroadway #theatrley #derkeklena
#fashion #portraits #profoto #canon
#broadwayphotographer #nycphotography
#photographersofnyc #newyorkcity
#BenjaminRiveraPhotography #broadwaysinger
#broadway
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DM or email me for rates and scheduling!
#derek klena#broadway#photographer: benjamin rivera#photoshoot: benjamin rivera#photoshoot: theatrely#photoshoots#social media#instagram#photos#benjaminriveraphotography
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